| He’s Come to Wive Her Stealthily in Padua: "The Taming of the Shrew," at Lincoln Park through June 26 |
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| Theatre - Reviews | |||
| Written by Mike Schulz | |||
| Monday, 20 June 2011 06:02 | |||
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Heaven knows the competition is stiff, but have any of Shakespeare’s comedic inspirations paid off quite as handsomely as the Bard’s structuring of Shrew as a play within a play? Certainly, with the on-stage action performed as an epic goof on drunkard Christopher Sly – who’s made to believe that he’s actually a nobleman, and that the male page beside him is actually his wife – the author must’ve known how funny this conceit would be. Yet there’s no way Shakespeare could’ve known how smartly it would play for audiences hundreds of years after its debut, who might otherwise find themselves hopelessly entangled in the knotty sexual politics. (The subject of female subjugation isn’t exactly the laugh riot it may have been in the 16th Century.) Many modern takes on Taming of the Shrew excise the character of Sly completely, and the show still works; in 2007, Coussens himself directed a Sly-less version at Augustana College. As Genesius Guild’s offering proves, though, this confused yet contented sot’s presence can yield magnificent benefits – at least if that sot is played by James J. Loula.
Coussens continually delivered astute pacing and well-executed choreography, and made generous use of the upper and lower levels on Lincoln Park’s set; his compositions were particularly elegant whenever more than a dozen actors were seen simultaneously. But as usual, Coussens was especially generous toward his performers. A number of actors cast in Shrew’s less overtly showy roles – Jeb Makula’s Tranio, Greg Donley’s Biondello, Michael Miller’s Curtis, Mischa Hooker’s Pedant – were allowed to emerge as robust, vital comedians. And there were inspiring second bananas galore: Neil Friberg’s Lucentio, with his romantically intoxicated grin; Bob Hanske’s Gremio, providing peerless randy-old-man laughs; Andy Curtiss’ Hortensio, making hysterical asides while slurping spaghetti; James Alt’s Grumio, achingly aggrieved by the ridiculousness surrounding him. Earl Strupp’s Baptista, meanwhile, brought down Saturday’s house with a flawless slow take to the crowd – in response to the absurd suggestion that his daughter Katherina was “fair and virtuous” – and while Shrew’s few women are given far less to do than the men, Michele Stine lent sensibility, poise, and a game spirit to her Bianca.
Just about everything regarding Genesius Guild’s season-opener is, and nothing more than the mead-guzzling cast member who’s watching the action along with you. Wholly immersed in the goings-on, acknowledging the actors’ occasional nods to him, and routinely cackling (with good reason) at the on-stage silliness, Loula’s Christopher Sly here is that rare peripheral figure who’s joyously outsize yet, incredibly, doesn’t steal focus. In Taming of the Shrew, you give it to him gladly.
For information, visit Genesius.org.
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